Abstract

Temperature and salinity profiles are being obtained from instrumented marine mammals in near real‐time. The mammals, mostly elephant seals, sample to depths of up to 2000 m in high‐latitude regions where there are very few other in situ observations. This study investigates the impact of mammal temperature and salinity observations on the UK Met Office's global ocean forecasting model, focussing on impacts in the Southern Ocean region. Three reanalyses were performed, each assimilating a varying amount of seal data whilst holding all other conditions constant.Assimilation of both temperature and salinity profiles from mammals has a detrimental effect on the model's temperature and salinity fields due to a high bias in the salinity values. Restricting assimilation to temperature profiles only has benefits for both temperature and salinity fields in regions of the ocean where seals are sampling, improving root‐mean‐square error statistics by between 1 and 6% compared to the case where no mammal data were assimilated. In addition, the assimilation of seal temperature profiles alters the mixed‐layer depth and repositions and increases gradients of some fronts compared to the no‐seals case.

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